LeX-Ray
European Statistical Programme 2013 17 (Text with Relevance for the EEA and for Switzerland) Regulation
WARNING: This legislation is over 10 years old.
The HTML structure of old legislation was often quite different, and so we may not have extracted it all correctly. Titles, chapters, articles, paragraphs, recitals, annexes, and footnotes could be missing.
Be sure to reference the official source document.
It looks like you're a bot or automated crawler (sorry if you're not).
We don't generate full content for automated requests.
For the full experience, please visit with a regular browser.
Article 1: Establishment of the European statistical programme
Article 2: Added value
Article 3: Scope
Article 4: Objectives
— Objective 1 : provide statistical information, in a timely manner, to support the development, monitoring and evaluation of the policies of the Union properly reflecting priorities, while keeping a balance between economic, social and environmental fields and serving the needs of the wide range of users of European statistics, including other decision-makers, researchers, businesses and European citizens in general, in a cost-effective manner without unnecessary duplication of effort, Objective 1
— Objective 2 : implement new methods of production of European statistics aiming at efficiency gains and quality improvements, Objective 2
— Objective 3 : strengthen the partnership within the ESS and beyond in order to further enhance its productivity and its leading role in official statistics worldwide, and Objective 3
— Objective 4 : ensure that delivery of such statistics is kept consistent throughout the whole duration of the programme, provided that this does not interfere with the priority-setting mechanisms of the ESS. Objective 4
Article 5: Statistical governance, independence, transparency and quality
Article 6: Statistical priority-setting
Article 7: Financing
Article 8: Administrative and technical assistance
Article 9: Annual work programmes
Article 10: Types of intervention
Article 11: Eligible actions
Article 12: Beneficiaries eligible for grants
Article 13: Protection of the financial interests of the Union
The European Anti-Fraud Office (OLAF) shall, where appropriate, carry out on-the-spot checks and inspections of economic operators concerned directly or indirectly by such funding in accordance with the procedures laid down in Council Regulation (Euratom, EC) No 2185/96 of 11 November 1996 concerning on-the-spot checks and inspections carried out by the Commission in order to protect the European Communities’ financial interests against fraud and other irregularities ( 10 ) , with a view to establishing whether there has been fraud, corruption or any other illegal activity affecting the financial interests of the Union in connection with a grant agreement, grant decision or contract funded pursuant to this Regulation.
Without prejudice to the first and second subparagraphs, cooperation agreements with third countries and international organisations, and grant agreements, grant decisions and contracts resulting from the implementation of this Regulation shall expressly empower the Commission, the Court of Auditors and OLAF to conduct such audits, on-the-spot checks and inspections.
Article 14: Participation in the programme by third countries
Article 15: Evaluation and review of the programme
Article 16: Entry into force
It shall apply from 1 January 2013.
Recital 1
Recital 2
Recital 3
Recital 4
Recital 5
Recital 6
Recital 7
Recital 8
Recital 9
Recital 10
Recital 11
Recital 12
Recital 13
Recital 14
Recital 15
Recital 16
Recital 17
Recital 18
Recital 19
Recital 20
Recital 21
Recital 22
Recital 23
Recital 24
Recital 25
Recital 26
Recital 27
Recital 28
Recital 29
Recital 30
Recital 31
Recital 32
Recital 33
Recital 34
Recital 35
Statistical infrastructure and objectives of the European statistical programme 2013 to 2017 Statistical infrastructure and objectives of the European statistical programme 2013 to 2017
Introduction Introduction
The implementation of Union policies requires high-quality, comparable and reliable statistical information about the economic, social and environmental situation in the Union and its components at national and regional level. European statistics are also indispensable for Europe, allowing the general public and European citizens to understand as well as to take part in the democratic process and debate about the present and future of the Union.
The European statistical programme provides the legislative framework for the development, production and dissemination of European statistics over the period 2013 to 2017.
European statistics are developed, produced and disseminated under that legislative framework through close and coordinated cooperation within the European Statistical System (ESS).
Statistics developed, produced and disseminated under the European statistical programme 2013 to 2017 (‘the programme’) contribute to the implementation of the Union’s policies as reflected in the TFEU and Europe 2020 and its respective flagship initiatives and other policies set out in the Commission’s strategic priorities.
Given the fact that the programme is a multiannual programme covering a period of five years, and that the ESS aims to maintain its role as a key player in the statistical field, the programme is ambitious in terms of scope and objectives, but the implementation of the programme will follow a step-wise approach. The development of an effective priority-setting and simplification mechanism will be an objective of the programme.
Statistical infrastructure Statistical infrastructure
The programme will strive to establish a statistical information infrastructure. This infrastructure has to be prepared for the wide and intensive use of various applications.
Policy-making drives the decisions to produce European statistics. However, those statistics should also be available and easily accessible to other decision-makers, researchers, businesses and European citizens in general as they constitute a public good and are paid for by European citizens and businesses, who should benefit equally from the services provided. For the infrastructure to fulfil this role it has to be designed according to a sound conceptual framework which, on the one hand, ensures fitness for a range of purposes and, on the other hand, allows flexible adaptation to evolving users’ needs in the years ahead.
The infrastructure of statistical information is presented below:
STATISTICAL INFORMATION INFRASTRUCTURE
Data : information compiled by national statistical authorities, on the basis of traditional statistical activities (sample surveys, censuses, etc.) and data from other sources that are reused for statistical purposes. This information is tailored to serve needs in specific policy areas, e.g. the labour market, migration or agriculture. Data
The term also includes data collected for administrative purposes but used by national statistical authorities for statistical purposes (usually referred to as data from administrative sources).
Accounting systems : coherent and integrated accounts, balance sheets and tables based on a set of internationally agreed rules. An accounting framework ensures a high profile of consistency and comparability; statistical data can be compiled and presented in a format that is designed for the purposes of analysis and policy-making. Accounting systems
Indicators : an indicator is a summary measure related to a key issue or phenomenon and derived from a series of observed facts. Indicators can be used to reveal relative positions or show positive or negative change. Indicators are usually a direct input into Union and global policies. In strategic policy fields they are important for setting targets and monitoring their achievement. Indicators
SPECIFIC PURPOSE
INDICATORS
MULTIPURPOSE
ACCOUNTING SYSTEMS
DATA
Within this overarching scheme, the programme will further distinguish three pillars of statistical information: Business; People’s Europe; and Geospatial, Environmental, Agricultural and Other Sectoral Statistics.
Union and relevant global policies are the instruments that specify the statistical requirements to which the programme will respond through the re-engineered structure and corresponding production processes. Therefore, each individual Union and global policy is reflected in the different components of the statistical infrastructure and is covered by specific activities in the programme. New policies identified in the years ahead will be covered by establishing new derivation paths of indicators/accounts based on the statistical data produced within the three pillars.
STATISTICAL INFORMATION — STRUCTURE AND DYNAMICS
Statistical needs linked to EU and global policies – Indicators
Accounting frameworks and harmonised statistical systems for the production of indicators
Statistics to be used as input for the accounting systems
Europe 2020, Economic Governance & Economic Globalisation
Economic and Social Performance
Environmental Sustainability
Business
People’s Europe
Geospatial, Environmental, Agricultural and Other Sectoral Statistics
Objectives Objectives
The general objective of the programme is for the ESS to continue to be the leading provider of high-quality statistics on Europe.
Bearing in mind the available resources both at national and Union level as well as the response burden, the following specific objectives shall be pursued in statistical actions undertaken for the implementation of the programme:
I. STATISTICAL OUTPUTS STATISTICAL OUTPUTS
Indicators Indicators
1. Europe 2020 Europe 2020
The endorsement of Europe 2020 by the European Council of June 2010 has shaped to a large extent the strategic agenda for the Union and national policies in the years ahead. That agenda establishes a number of headline targets and flagship initiatives for which statistical indicators have to be delivered by the ESS in a number of areas (i.e. improving the conditions for innovation, research and development, promoting employment, meeting Union climate change and energy objectives, resource efficiency, improving education levels, including learning mobility, active and healthy ageing, and promoting social inclusion through the reduction of poverty).
Objective 1.1.1 Objective 1.1.1
Provide high-quality statistical information, which should be available in a timely manner, to monitor the implementation of Europe 2020. New indicators shall, to the extent possible, be based on available statistical data.
The objective will be implemented by the making available of:
The crisis and the tensions in the financial markets have highlighted the need to strengthen the economic governance of the Union. Decisive steps in economic governance and coordination have already been taken by the Union, some of which will have major statistical implications, in addition to ongoing statistical activities.
Objective 1.2.1 Objective 1.2.1
Develop new and enhance existing statistical information relevant for Union decision-makers and the public at large in relation to the strengthened and integrated economic governance of the Union and the surveillance cycle integrating the Stability and Growth Pact and the economic policy.
The objective will be implemented by:
Provide Union decision-makers with reliable statistics and indicators for administrative and regulatory purposes and for monitoring specific Union policy commitments.
The objective will be implemented by:
The social, economic and other effects of the financial crisis, the increase in cross-border flows and the fragmentation of production processes have highlighted the need for a more coherent framework and enhanced measurement of globalised production.
Objective 1.3.1 Objective 1.3.1
Enhance the indicators and statistical information available on economic globalisation and global value chains for Union decision-makers and the public at large.
The objective will be implemented by:
The Commission Communication of 20 August 2009 entitled ‘GDP and beyond: Measuring progress in a changing world’, and the publication of the Stiglitz-Sen-Fitoussi Report on the Measurement of Economic Performance and Social Progress have given new impetus to the key challenge for the ESS, namely how to achieve better statistics on cross-cutting issues and more integrated statistics to describe complex social, environmental and economic phenomena beyond the traditional measures of economic output. The European System of National and Regional Accounts (ESA) offers an integrated and consistent framework for all economic statistics that should be complemented by other indicators in order to provide more comprehensive information for policy- and decision-making.
1. Economic and social performance Economic and social performance
The economic crisis has reinforced the need to have a set of high-quality macroeconomic indicators to better understand and analyse economic fluctuations and their effects on society, and thereby facilitate the decision-making process. Increasingly globalised production makes it necessary to develop a consistent framework that facilitates the interpretation and integration of statistics from different domains.
Objective 2.1.1 Objective 2.1.1
Supplement measurement of economic performance by different dimensions of globalisation, the quality of life, access to goods and services, environmental sustainability, health, well-being, social cohesion and social inclusion. Develop a framework for the analysis of globalised production.
The objective will be implemented by:
Provide key macroeconomic and social indicators and Principal European Economic Indicators (PEEIs) as a coherent set of indicators addressing the Union and global statistical data requirements and adjust PEEIs to meet evolving users’ needs.
The objective will be implemented by:
Protecting, preserving and improving the environment for present and future generations, as well as combating the effects of climate change, are very high on the European agenda and are objectives of the Treaties. Efficient policies in those domains require statistical information across various areas.
Objective 2.2.1 Objective 2.2.1
Provide environmental accounts and climate change-related statistics, taking into account international developments in this area.
The objective will be implemented by:
1. Business Business
European enterprises are the focus of a large number of Union policies. In addition, they are responsible for the provision of basic data. Accordingly, business statistics in the broad sense are in heavy demand to support the decision-making process but also to help European citizens and businesses understand the impact of those policies, differentiating between large enterprises, mid-caps and small and medium-sized enterprises for which there is an increased need for detailed and harmonised statistics. There is simultaneously a need to reduce the administrative and reporting burden.
Objective 3.1.1 Objective 3.1.1
Increase the efficiency and effectiveness of statistical production processes. Provide high-quality statistics on key areas where enterprises are the centre of interest, such as business statistics, short-term indicators, their investment in human capital and skills, international transactions, globalisation, internal market monitoring, R & D and innovation, and tourism. Special attention should be paid to the availability of data in high value-added industrial or services sectors, in particular in the green, digital or social economy (such as health and education).
The objective will be implemented by:
European citizens are at the heart of Union policies. Consequently, social statistics in the broad sense are in heavy demand to support the decision-making process and to monitor the outcome of social policies, but also to help European citizens assess the impact of those policies on their lives and well-being.
Objective 3.2.1 Objective 3.2.1
Provide statistics on key areas of social policy where the citizen is the centre of interest, such as well-being, sustainability, social cohesion, poverty, inequalities, demographic challenges (in particular population ageing and migration), the labour market, education and training, including childhood education, adult learning, vocational training and learning mobility of young people, culture, physical activity, quality of life, safety, health, disability, consumption, free movement and the internal market, mobility of young people, technological innovation and new lifestyle choices. Those statistics shall be disaggregated by gender where appropriate, for groups that are of special interest to social policy makers. Priorities shall be set in accordance with Article 6.
The objective will be implemented by:
The combination of statistics with spatially referenced data and geospatial analysis will offer new opportunities that the ESS will explore further. Specific issues, such as confidentiality and statistical validity of small area estimations, will need to be given particular attention.
Energy and transport statistics to support Europe 2020 and climate change policy will be of high importance in the future.
The significance of agriculture among the Union policies will remain during 2013-17. The statistical work will be strongly influenced by the outcome of the reflection on the Common Agricultural Policy after 2013. Focus will be on environmental, biodiversity/ecosystem-related, economic, human health and safety and social dimensions.
Objective 3.3.1 Objective 3.3.1
Support evidence-based policy-making by a more flexible and increased use of spatial information combined with social, economic and environmental statistical information.
The objective will be implemented by:
Provide environmental statistics to support the policy-making process of the Union.
The objective will be implemented by:
Provide energy and transport statistics to support the policies of the Union.
The objective will be implemented by the production and dissemination of statistics on:
Provide agriculture, fisheries and forestry statistics for the development and monitoring of the Common Agricultural and Fisheries Policies, reflecting key European strategic objectives related to sustainability as well as rural development by carrying out regular activities related to the development, production and dissemination of statistics.
The objective will be implemented by:
The ESS is currently facing a number of challenges: increasing demand for high-quality statistics, a growing need for complex multidimensional statistics, the appearance of new actors on the information market, constraints on resources, the need to further reduce the statistical burden on respondents as well as the diversification of communication tools. This implies adapting the production and dissemination methods of European official statistics in a progressive way.
ESS quality management ESS quality management
Objective 1.1 Objective 1.1
Implement a quality management system in the ESS based on the Code of Practice.
Strengthen the sharing of good practices in the implementation of the Code of Practice and ensure that quality reporting is targeting different user needs.
The objective will be implemented by:
The ESS is facing a major challenge: how to provide high-quality European statistics to satisfy increasing needs for statistics in a context of substantially reduced budgets of Member States and a zero-growth human resource policy at the Commission and in Member States which, for some bodies, will result in a real reduction in human resources. Given those resource constraints at European and national level, it is important to strengthen priority-setting and simplification measures, which require the commitment of all ESS partners. A priority-setting mechanism has been introduced as an integrated part of the preparation of annual work programmes and will be implemented throughout the duration of the programme. This involves, among other things, an annual review of existing statistical requirements, taking as its point of departure initiatives proposed by the Commission for reducing statistical requirements considering the interests of users, producers and respondents. The process should be pursued in close cooperation with users and producers of European statistics.
Objective 2.1 Objective 2.1
Implement a priority-setting mechanism for the ESS in order to simplify reporting requirements and to adjust to new needs for statistics while taking into account the constraints on the producers, the response burden and the needs of users.
The objective will be implemented by:
Objective 3.1 Objective 3.1
Put in place gradually, taking into account costs generated in the ESS by implementation, an ESS business architecture allowing more integrated production of European statistics; harmonise and standardise statistical production methods and metadata; enhance the horizontal (across statistical domains) and vertical (across ESS partners) integration of statistical production processes in the ESS in respect of the principle of subsidiarity; use and integrate multiple data sources; produce multi-purpose statistics. Particular attention will be given to confidentiality issues that will arise with increased use, reuse and exchange of micro-data and administrative records.
The objective will be implemented by:
Ensure the good functioning and coherence of the ESS through effective collaboration and communication.
The objective will be implemented by:
Objective 4.1 Objective 4.1
Make the ESS the first data source on European statistics for all users and, in particular, for public and private decision-makers, by providing a high-quality statistical information service based on the principles of free and easy access to European statistics.
Intensifying and extending the dialogue between users and producers of statistics to meet user needs for high-quality statistics. An early involvement of users in new developments is key to improving the effectiveness and efficiency of the ESS.
Extend and rationalise the range of dissemination products to meet the needs of users using new technologies.
Set up a cost-efficient, integrated and secure infrastructure within the ESS for access to confidential data for scientific purposes.
The objective will be implemented by:
Objective 5.1 Objective 5.1
Satisfy learning and development needs in the ESS based on a combination of training courses and learning and development opportunities.
Improve the collaboration between ESS members for the transfer of knowledge and sharing and implementation of best practices and common innovative approaches in the production of statistics.
Organise the activities, participation and contribution of the research communities in the improvement of the statistical production chains and of the quality of official statistical information.
The objective will be implemented by:
Partnership within the ESS and beyond Partnership within the ESS and beyond
In the spirit of partnership, the national statistical authorities and the Commission (Eurostat) are responsible for the development, production and dissemination of European statistics.
Objective 1.1 Objective 1.1
Implement the enhanced ESS governance framework.
The objective will be implemented by the implementation of the revision of ESR and of Commission Decision 2012/504/EU of 17 September 2012 on Eurostat ( 3 ) ;
Objective 1.2 Objective 1.2
Enhance the coordinating role of the Commission (Eurostat) as the European Union’s Statistical Office.
The objective will be implemented by:
Strengthen the cooperation with the ESCB and the European and international organisations involved in the production of data for statistical or administrative purposes through common projects and coordinated developments. Ensure consistency between Union and international standards.
The objective will be implemented by:
Promote and implement statistical advisory and statistical assistance activities in countries outside the Union in line with the priorities of the foreign policy of the Union, with particular emphasis on enlargement and the European Neighbourhood Policy.
The objective will be implemented by:
( 2 ) OJ L 108, 25.4.2007, p. 1 .
( 3 ) OJ L 251, 18.9.2012, p. 49 .
Footnote p0: This Regulation shall be binding in its entirety and directly applicable in all Member States.
Done at Strasbourg, 15 January 2013.